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2. Presentation Outline. I - IntroductionII - Assessing Quality Education in relation to Academic Attainment and Community ReintegrationIII - Developing a Quality Assurance Monitoring System for Juvenile Justice SchoolsIV - Questions and Answers. 3. Background Information. JJEEP's Major Go
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1. 1 Juvenile Justice Education Research and Quality Assurance
2. 2 Presentation Outline I - Introduction
II - Assessing Quality Education in relation to Academic Attainment and Community Reintegration
III - Developing a Quality Assurance Monitoring System for Juvenile Justice Schools
IV - Questions and Answers
3. 3 Background Information JJEEP’s Major Goals
Best Education Practices Research
Educational Quality Assurance (QA) of Florida’s Juvenile Justice Schools
Technical Assistance for School Districts and Educational Providers
State Legislative and Department of Education Policy Recommendations
4. 4 Florida’s Juvenile Justice Schools Approximately 196 facilities with education services provided onsite
Approximately 10,000 youth on any given day
Facility size ranges from 15 to 350 youth
75% of residential custody & care services are privatized
50% of education services are privatized
Local school districts are ultimately responsible for all educational services
5. 5 Prior Literature While there are variations in the findings reported in the delinquency and life course literature, a major theme that has emerged is continuity in the life course. It has been found in numerous studies that problem children often become adolescent delinquents and subsequent adult criminals. As a result, an often voiced conclusion is that the “best” predictor of future behavior is past behavior (Robins 1966, West and Farrington 1977, Wolfgang et al. 1987, Patterson 1992, and Moffit 1993).
6. 6 A Dynamic Life Course Conceptualization
7. 7 Self Selection and Life Events Self-Selection = Social Control and Individual Decisions
Life Events = Education, Jobs, Marriage, Military Service, etc.
Combining Self-Selection and Life Events
8. 8 Research Methods and Data Cohort of 4,794 youth released from 113 residential juvenile justice facilities throughout Florida in fiscal year 2000-2001 are being longitudinally tracked
Student data from official State Databases
DOE and FDLE
Program level data on Educational Quality and Program Characteristics
Statistical method
Logistic regression
Statistical significance is <.05
9. 9 Research Question 1 Does receipt of high quality education while incarcerated increase the likelihood of particular youth returning to school following release?
Exposure to high quality education while incarcerated increased the likelihood of youth returning to school following release from low/moderate risk programs.
Youth released from high/maximum risk programs did not benefit from high quality education as measured by return to school.
Youth released from low/moderate risk programs comprised 73% of the residential releases in the cohort and the 27% of the youth released from high/maximum risk programs represented youth who were likely more entrenched in delinquency.
10. 10 Research Question 2 Does above average academic achievement while incarcerated increase the likelihood of particular youth returning to school following release?
Academic attainment was strongly correlated to whether youth return to school following release
This finding was statistically significant for youth released from low/moderate risk programs
11. 11 Research Question 3 Does the receipt of high school or GED diplomas while incarcerated reduce the likelihood of particular youth begin rearrested following release?
Youth who earned a high school or GED diploma while incarcerated were less likely to be rearrested following release
This finding was statistically significant for youth release form high/maximum risk programs
12. 12 Research Question 4 Does returning to school with above average attendance reduce the likelihood of particular youth being rearrested following release?
Youth who return to school are less likely to be rearrested following release
Moreover, above average school attendance further reduces the likelihood of rearrest
This finding was statistically significant for youth released from low/moderate risk programs
13. 13 Research Question 5 How does prior school performance and attachment influence the response of particular youth to education while incarcerated, their subsequent return to school, and rearrest following release?
Prior school performance and attachment significantly influences youths’ participation in school while incarcerated and their likelihood of returning to school and being rearrested following release
Youth with high attachment to school are more likely to benefit from exposure to high quality education while incarcerated, regardless of their level of delinquency, by increasing their likelihood of returning to school
Youth with high prior school performance and attachment to school were also more likely to benefit from returning to school by reducing their likelihood of being rearrested
14. 14 Summary Our combined cohort of maximum, high, moderate, and low risk delinquent youth was comprised of youth characterized by disproportionate educational deficiencies as compared to matched public school students resulting in major challenges for the provision of quality and effective educational services while incarcerated
The results indicate that high quality education can serve as a turning point particularly in the life course of low and moderate risk incarcerated delinquents
15. 15 While our cohort of delinquent youth suffered disproportionate educational deficiencies, it is likely that the moderate and low risk youth were less entrenched and committed to their delinquent life course as compared to the maximum and high risk delinquents
Continued longitudinal tracking of our cohort is necessary to more fully address the conditions under which continuity or turning points occur and are sustained or not during transition from incarceration into the community and throughout the life course including the role of marriage, jobs, military service, etc.
16. 16 Policy Implications:
The No Child Left Behind Act (NCLB) of 2001 is intended to increase the educational opportunities for all students in public schools and in juvenile justice facilities throughout the United States.
Since the inception of Juvenile Courts at the turn of the Twentieth Century, the quality of juvenile justice education programs throughout the country has been uneven and inferior to public schools.
17. 17 If states are able to successfully implement the various NCLB juvenile justice school requirements and practices, educational opportunity will be substantially increased for incarcerated delinquent youth throughout the country thereby providing the potential for positive turning points in the life course of countless numbers of youth.
Indeed, the challenge will be to overcome various impediments during the implementation of NCLB (i.e. ideological and professional resistance, politics, and various other bureaucratic obstacles)
18. 18 Continuing Research Extended longitudinal findings
2-3 years post release
Second cohort using same methods
Different year of release
1-2 years post-release
Comparison of specific subgroups within the population
Special education students (behavior disorders v.s. learning disabled)
Students who earn diplomas while incarcerated (GED v.s. Standard H.S. Diploma)
Younger and older youth
19. 19 Developing an Effective Educational Quality Assurance System for Juvenile Justice Schools
20. 20 The Context of Delinquent Populations –Difficulties with Educating Incarcerated Youth An average 1-2 years behind their age appropriate grade level
43% have some form of disability
Chronic histories of school failure, truancy, dropout, and school discipline problems
High mobility rates
Large facilities in rural areas make providing parental involvement and transition services difficult
The juvenile justice system is often not part of the public school system
Difficulties in recruiting and retaining qualified teachers
The education component of a juvenile justice program often competes for resources with other areas such as security and treatment
21. 21 Litigation in Juvenile Justice 1983 - Florida’s juvenile justice system fell under scrutiny for excessive use of force, lack of due process, lack of educational services, IDEA
In the past two decades 34 states have experienced litigation regarding their juvenile justice institutions (most common cause for these suits has been educational services) n=50
As a result, 19 states have changed their organizational structure (n=48)
And 16 states developed or changed their accountability system (n=48)
22. 22 Florida’s Reaction to Litigation – Bobby M. 1990 – 1994 Began revamping the juvenile justice system.
Closed one state training school and reduced population in two others
Created one agency for Dependent youth and a separate agency for Delinquent youth
In 1995, the Florida DOE developed the first set of Quality Assurance Education Standards
Based on Special Education performance standards and statutory authority
In 1998, the Florida DOE contracted with FSU
Added research component
Began providing technical assistance
Used research to guide the Quality Assurance system
23. 23 The Initial Development of Florida‘s Quality Assurance System In 1998, JJEEP conducted an extensive literature review in the areas of juvenile justice education and the education of at-risk students
Sponsored five regional meetings throughout the state to solicit input from juvenile justice teachers and principals
24. 24 Promising Educational Practices from the Literature Initial Assessments
Educational Planning
Transition Planning & Services
Parent Involvement
Curriculum & Instruction
Individualized Curriculum
Vocational Programming
Special Education
GED Prep
Cultural Diversity
Psychosocial Education Teacher Qualifications & Professional Development
Effective School Environment
Adequate Space
Instructional Materials
Community Involvement
Separate Educational Budget
Aftercare
25. 25 Continuing Development of Florida's Quality Assurance System Annual Raising of the Bar
Incorporating Latest Best Practice Research & Experience
Implementing New Legislation
Facilitating School District and Provider Input Annually through Standard Revisions
26. 26 Increasing Accountability for Juvenile Justice Education 1999 – HB 349
Research and technical assistance, Sanctions and interventions, LEA contract management
2000 – State Board of Education Rule
Testing, Student planning, Records, School related transition services, Diversified curriculum and diploma options
2001 – SB 2464
Educational Funding, Space, Vocational
2002 – No Child Left Behind
Improve education services, Return to school, Highly qualified teachers, Program evaluation,
27. 27 Quality Assurance Standards Transition
Enrollment, testing, planning (academic and transition), guidance, parent involvement
Service Delivery
Curriculum and instruction (vocational, academic, reading, employability/social), special education services
Educational Resources and Learning Environment
Teacher qualifications, collaboration, educational resources
Contract Management
Local school district accountability and oversight
For a full version of JJEEP’s Standards, visit our website at www.jjeep.org
28. 28 Quality Assurance Process QA Review Protocol and Methodology
Triangulation of Information
Documentation, Interviews, & Observations
Peer Reviewers
Follow-up with low performing programs
Provide technical assistance through site visits and conferences
Process vs. Component Compliance
Talk to teachers and kids, Observe classrooms
How are materials and information used? Is the process part of the program’s culture?
29. 29 Current Longitudinal Research How should outcome information influence new Quality Assurance standards and process?
What types of educational services best benefit which type of students?
The only thing constant in JJEEP is change (continuous evaluation, strategic planning, new legislation, new research)
30. 30 Contact Us for Information JJEEP
325 John Knox Road
Bldg. L, Suite 102
Tallahassee, FL 32303
_______________(850) 414-8355______________
Visit our website for information on research, standards, technical assistance documents, and links related to juvenile justice education
www.jjeep.org